Cairo International Film Festival adds new venues and increased number of shorts
Egypt’s capital is gearing up for the opening of one of the most anticipated events of its annual roster, the 43rd Cairo International Film Festival, which returns this month.
The festival will run from November 26 to December 5, with the usual round of screenings, talks, masterclasses, discussions and networking events.
This year, 98 films from 63 countries will participate in the event. Of the films being screened, 12 will be singled out with a red carpet event. Thirty-four films will be making their world debuts, while 44 others will have their Mena premieres at the event, said festival president Mohamed Hefzy at a press conference in Cairo on Sunday.
The festival will mostly take place at Cairo’s famed Opera House, in the district of Zamalek. However, this year, a couple of new venues have been added to the roster, including the newly renovated Ewart Hall, at the American University in Cairo’s Tahrir Square Campus, and the nearby Zamalek Cinema.
The opening film is Official Competition, starring Penelope Cruz and Antonio Banderas, which will be screened for the first time in the Middle East after garnering critical acclaim in Venice this year.
A number of Arab films are also expected to make their debuts in each of the four competitions. There is an international competition, a regional competition titled Horizons of Arab Cinema and one for short films. The most illustrious of all is the Critics Week competition.
“Cinema is a mirror for our culture, and one of the most important ways that we share that culture with the rest of the world,” said Hefzy.
A highlight of this year’s festival is the number of short films participating, which surpasses submissions from previous years. Hefzy said the short films competition is the only one in the Mena region and also doubles as an Oscars qualifier. The winner of the shorts competition takes home the festival’s prestigious Youssef Chahine Award.
The festival is also expected to hand out a number of other awards this year to single out different facets of filmmaking, including for best actor and actress. The recipient of the prestigious Faten Hamama Award, given each year to a prominent figure in the Arab world’s film industry for outstanding achievements, will be Egyptian superstar Karim Abdel Aziz, who is being recognised for a three-decade career.
The festival’s highest honour, the Golden Pyramid Award, will be given to veteran actress and performer Nelly, one of the most recognisable Egyptian celebrities of the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s.
Internationally, Cannes Film Festival artistic director Thierry Fremaux and Oscar-winning composer AR Rahman will be honoured for their contributions to the industry.
One of the festival’s main partners this year is Netflix, which will hold a number of lectures and panel discussions.
This year also marks the return of Cairo Industry Days, a subsection of the festival that helps budding filmmakers from the Mena region get into the industry.
Through the festival’s Cairo Film Connection platform, which pledges cash prizes to support new film projects submitted to the festival, $300,000 worth of prizes from 22 sponsors are expected to be doled out.
And in a bid to boost the country’s tourism sector, the festival is being overseen by the country’s culture ministry and Experience Egypt, the digital arm of the tourism promotion authority.